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es caused 
by across-the-board spending cuts.The White House abruptly retreated under 
pressure last Wednesday when it indicated it would accept an easing of 
the FAA cuts while leaving the balance of the $85 billion in 
reductions unchanged. Given lengthy political struggle surrounding across-the-board 
cuts, the issue was sensitive enough so that when Sens. Susan Collins, 
R-Maine and Mark Udall, D-Colo., initially proposed legislation that explicitly 
said the measure would assure the towers remain open, Senate Majority Leader 
Harry Reid, D-Nev., objected, according to several officials briefed on 
the discussions.The wording was altered to drop the explicit reference, 
although the flexibility to keep the towers open was retained. It was 
not clear whether Reid insisted on his own behalf, as a proxy 
for other Democrats, or on behalf of the White House. But it 
was not the first time the leader has become involved in a 
struggle over the fate of the towers.When the Senate was debating a 
different measure earlier in the year, he quietly prevented Moran from gaining 
a vote on a stand-alone proposal to keep the towers open.A spokesman 
for Reid was not immediately available to comment.Huerta testified recently 
that the cost of cancelling FAA furloughs would be $220 million through 
Sept. 30, leaving about $33 million in freed-up funding to maintain the 
towers. He also said the agency is working with about 50 communities 
and airport operators in hop
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, right, hands a folder to U.S. Secretary 
of State John Kerry before the start of the NATO- Russia Council 
meeting at NATO headquarters on Tuesday, April 23, 2013, in Brussels, Belgium.APSecretary 
of State John Kerry is headed to Russia next week for talks 
on Syria, Iran and terrorism concerns that have spiked since the Boston 
Marathon bombings.Kerry will meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin 
and Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.Their conversations will also touch on 
a host of bilateral tensions between Washington and Moscow.They include 
the Kremlin's halt on U.S. adoptions of Russian children and new Russian 
restrictions on civil society groups.And the talks will definitely address 
the ethnic Chechen brothers suspected of killing three people and injuring 
over 200 in Boston earlier this month.Kerry told reporters Tuesday his upcoming 
trip to Russia is "overdue."
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